Search datasets
Taxonomic Group
- Amphibians / Reptiles (1) Apply Amphibians / Reptiles filter
- (-) Remove Birds filter Birds
- Fossil (1) Apply Fossil filter
- (-) Remove Herbaceous plants filter Herbaceous plants
- Invertebrates (1) Apply Invertebrates filter
- Mammals (1) Apply Mammals filter
- Microbes (1) Apply Microbes filter
- Woody Plants (1) Apply Woody Plants filter
Biome
- (-) Remove (none) filter (none)
- (-) Remove Desert filter Desert
- Freshwater (1) Apply Freshwater filter
- Marine (2) Apply Marine filter
- Temperate Forest (2) Apply Temperate Forest filter
- Temperate Grassland (5) Apply Temperate Grassland filter
- Tropical Forest (1) Apply Tropical Forest filter
- Tropical Savanna (1) Apply Tropical Savanna filter
Data Type
Ecological Level
Scale (extent)
Accessiblity
- (-) Remove (none) filter (none)
- (-) Remove Data request filter Data request
- (-) Remove EcoData Retriever ready filter EcoData Retriever ready
- Publicly available (3) Apply Publicly available filter
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3
This web site hosts data collected for the Central Arizona-Phoenix Long Term Ecological Research Station in the arid mentropolis of Phoenix. Data Location: http://caplter.asu.edu/data/ Site Location: downtown Pheonix and the surrounding arid ecosystems Datasets Available: THEMES - land-use, land-cover, and land architecture; climate, ecosytems, and people; water dynamics, biogeochemical patterns,...MORE
Spot-mapping data for birds combined with information on the local vegetation. This includes information on the number and position of singing males and breeding pairs, as well as information on the number of nests and fledglings. Plots vary in scale from 10 hectares (in closed habitats) to 40 hectares (in...MORE
eBird is a catalog of 'checklists' for bird species observed globally by novice and experienced bird observers reporting to the eBird Citizen Science Project run by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society. 'Checklists' include presence/absence, species count, and location information for a single obervation event. Four...MORE